* Darcs @ 2007-06-24 5:32 Bu Bacoo 2007-06-24 17:59 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds 2007-06-25 11:36 ` Darcs Florian Weimer 0 siblings, 2 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Bu Bacoo @ 2007-06-24 5:32 UTC (permalink / raw) To: git Hello guys (girls?) What do you think about darcs? There was a lot written/spoken about morons and stupidos around thinking in cvs / svn, etc... (what would be the words for dudes around vss ....). But not a lot of darcs, even if there are tools like Darcs-Git, etc... Are git and darcs supposed to extend each other? Or? The patch algebra in Darcs looks to me pretty similar to Linuse's patch-SCM used for kernel bellow 2.6.12.something? Thanks for opinions. Bu ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 5:32 Darcs Bu Bacoo @ 2007-06-24 17:59 ` Linus Torvalds 2007-06-24 20:45 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff 2007-06-28 1:26 ` Darcs Josh Triplett 2007-06-25 11:36 ` Darcs Florian Weimer 1 sibling, 2 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Linus Torvalds @ 2007-06-24 17:59 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Bu Bacoo; +Cc: git On Sun, 24 Jun 2007, Bu Bacoo wrote: > > What do you think about darcs? > > There was a lot written/spoken about morons and stupidos around > thinking in cvs / svn, etc... (what would be the words for dudes > around vss ....). Ahh, a chance to flame! I will never back down from such a challenge! Darcs is .. umm .. ehh.. "Academic". Ok, I realize that's a pretty weak flame, and I'm sorry. It's not that darcs users are "stupid" or "complete morons" or "donkey turds with arms and legs", it's just that the whole project is centered around some academic ideas that have absolutely no relevance in real life, and that just don't work in practice. In other words, it's a fun project, but it's largely irrelevant. The whole underpinning of darcs ("everything is a collection of patches" and the "patch algebra") is kind of interesting, but it's irrelevant. The thing it solves is not the thing you want solved, and you really don't want to handle conflicts at a "patch" level. I personally think darcs is closer to a smart "quilt" than a "final" SCM. It's good for keeping track of patches, but let's face it, if you have really big changes, you don't want to handle them the way darcs does. And in that sense, I do think the two approaches can _complement_ each other. A lot of people use quilt (or quite often, something similar, based on a SCM in the background: git has and stgit and guilt, hg has "mercurial queues"). And it's absolutely true that you want to have a "fluid" level too, and darcs can do that. But you do *not* want to do the whole project history that way. At some point, you need something that works at another level than patch queues. Darcs itself kind of has something like this with "checkpointing", but the fact is, git is just better at this. So it basically boils down to the fact that I don't think darcs solves the real problems, and won't scale up. It's versioning model seems *totally* broken, for example. Fundmantal example: somebody has a problem/bug. Tell me how to tell a developer what his exact version is - without creating new tags, and without having to synchronize the archives. Just tell the developer what version he is at. In git, you just give a revision number. In darcs, what the *hell* do you do? And that's a pretty damn fundamental operation for a source control management setup! As far as I know, darcs only has patch identities. Linus ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 17:59 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds @ 2007-06-24 20:45 ` Martin Langhoff 2007-06-24 21:19 ` Darcs Jan Hudec ` (3 more replies) 2007-06-28 1:26 ` Darcs Josh Triplett 1 sibling, 4 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Martin Langhoff @ 2007-06-24 20:45 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linus Torvalds; +Cc: Bu Bacoo, git On 6/25/07, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > Ahh, a chance to flame! I will never back down from such a challenge! > > Darcs is .. umm .. ehh.. > > "Academic". OTOH, and from the POV of someone closely following the SCM tools in the last few years (and using almost all of them), darcs was the first usable DSCM in the camp. I am not sure how much of its commandline user interface was borrowed from BK or elsewhere, but darcs was _easy_, where Arch was extremely hard to use. The darcs commandset (init, push, pull) is what git, hg and bzr have today in common. At least _I_ learned about how it could be easy by watching people use Darcs (and feeling very ashamed of my baroque Arch usage). The focus on patch tracking (as opposed to "snapshot" tracking) and the whole patch algebra are two misfires I'd say. Snapshot-tracking DSCMs are winning (faster and fundamentally more reliable), and the patch algebra doesn't quite scale and (as far as I've heard) sometimes ends in unsolvable corner cases. And the closer we get to Darcs UI the happier I feel ;-) cheers, martin ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 20:45 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff @ 2007-06-24 21:19 ` Jan Hudec 2007-06-24 21:52 ` Darcs Theodore Tso ` (2 subsequent siblings) 3 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Jan Hudec @ 2007-06-24 21:19 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin Langhoff; +Cc: Linus Torvalds, Bu Bacoo, git [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2145 bytes --] On Mon, Jun 25, 2007 at 08:45:57 +1200, Martin Langhoff wrote: > On 6/25/07, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > >Ahh, a chance to flame! I will never back down from such a challenge! > > > >Darcs is .. umm .. ehh.. > > > >"Academic". > OTOH, and from the POV of someone closely following the SCM tools in > the last few years (and using almost all of them), darcs was the first > usable DSCM in the camp. I am not sure how much of its commandline > user interface was borrowed from BK or elsewhere, but darcs was > _easy_, where Arch was extremely hard to use. Arch is not in fact distributed. One key feature that makes things distributed is that object (revision in SCM) identity is independent of their location (repository in SCM). And in Arch that is not true. Revisions independent of repositories (and branches) is what makes the ad-hoc branching, that makes git (and hg, bazaar and darcs) so easy, possible. Arch claimed to have easy branching, but it was still the old explicit model. (Besides yes, I can confirm that Arch was not the easiest thing to use.) > The darcs commandset (init, push, pull) is what git, hg and bzr have > today in common. At least _I_ learned about how it could be easy by > watching people use Darcs (and feeling very ashamed of my baroque Arch > usage). The focus on patch tracking (as opposed to "snapshot" > tracking) and the whole patch algebra are two misfires I'd say. > Snapshot-tracking DSCMs are winning (faster and fundamentally more > reliable), and the patch algebra doesn't quite scale and (as far as > I've heard) sometimes ends in unsolvable corner cases. IMHO the patch algebra also falls short of it's goal. The idea is supposed to be that you can cherry-pick easily. However, in practice many changes that are easy to cherry-pick are textually dependent in something like import list, list of files in makefile or such. While git cherry-pick will happily apply such patch and give you a single easy to resolve conflict, darcs will just insist on pulling the other patch as well. -- Jan 'Bulb' Hudec <bulb@ucw.cz> [-- Attachment #2: Digital signature --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 189 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 20:45 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff 2007-06-24 21:19 ` Darcs Jan Hudec @ 2007-06-24 21:52 ` Theodore Tso 2007-06-24 22:22 ` Darcs Junio C Hamano 2007-06-24 23:21 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds 3 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Theodore Tso @ 2007-06-24 21:52 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin Langhoff; +Cc: Linus Torvalds, Bu Bacoo, git On Mon, Jun 25, 2007 at 08:45:57AM +1200, Martin Langhoff wrote: > OTOH, and from the POV of someone closely following the SCM tools in > the last few years (and using almost all of them), darcs was the first > usable DSCM in the camp. I am not sure how much of its commandline > user interface was borrowed from BK or elsewhere, but darcs was > _easy_, where Arch was extremely hard to use. > The darcs commandset (init, push, pull) is what git, hg and bzr have > today in common. > And the closer we get to Darcs UI the happier I feel ;-) Darcs was first announced in April 2003 [1]. Linus first started using BK to manage the Linux source tree in 2002; I first started using Bitkeeper to manage e2fsprogs back in 2001; and BK was first available in late 1998. So to give credit where credit is due, the whole "$foo init", "$foo commit", "$foo push", "$foo pull" DSCM UI was first pioneered by Larry McVoy and BitKeeper, not Darcs. - Ted [1] http://www.haskell.org/pipermail/haskell-cafe/2003-April/004139.html ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 20:45 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff 2007-06-24 21:19 ` Darcs Jan Hudec 2007-06-24 21:52 ` Darcs Theodore Tso @ 2007-06-24 22:22 ` Junio C Hamano [not found] ` <61e816970706241638j60830741p2cd1a102a72ae226@mail.gmail.com> 2007-06-24 23:21 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds 3 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Junio C Hamano @ 2007-06-24 22:22 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin Langhoff; +Cc: Linus Torvalds, Bu Bacoo, git "Martin Langhoff" <martin.langhoff@gmail.com> writes: >> "Academic". > > OTOH, and from the POV of someone closely following the SCM tools in > the last few years (and using almost all of them), darcs was the first > usable DSCM in the camp. I am not sure how much of its commandline > user interface was borrowed from BK or elsewhere, but darcs was > _easy_, where Arch was extremely hard to use. I second this. Before I started contributing to git in its early weeks, I staged my own changes to my day-job project in darcs to trickle them in to the company's central repository (I was sufficiently faster than other members of the project and I had to pace myself). It would have been much more difficult for me to grasp the basic concepts of how "distributed development" process works, if I did not have an exposure to Darcs before I started, especially because I never used BK. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
[parent not found: <61e816970706241638j60830741p2cd1a102a72ae226@mail.gmail.com>]
* Re: Darcs [not found] ` <61e816970706241638j60830741p2cd1a102a72ae226@mail.gmail.com> @ 2007-06-24 23:40 ` Dan Chokola 2007-06-25 0:00 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds 1 sibling, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Dan Chokola @ 2007-06-24 23:40 UTC (permalink / raw) To: git Resent to the mailing list because my crappy mail client defaulted to HTML. Sorry. ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Dan Chokola <dan@chokola.com> Date: Jun 24, 2007 7:38 PM Subject: Re: Darcs To: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> Cc: Martin Langhoff <martin.langhoff@gmail.com>, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>, Bu Bacoo <bubacoo@gmail.com>, git@vger.kernel.org On 6/24/07, Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com> wrote: > "Martin Langhoff" <martin.langhoff@gmail.com> writes: > > >> "Academic". > > > > OTOH, and from the POV of someone closely following the SCM tools in > > the last few years (and using almost all of them), darcs was the first > > usable DSCM in the camp. I am not sure how much of its commandline > > user interface was borrowed from BK or elsewhere, but darcs was > > _easy_, where Arch was extremely hard to use. > > I second this. Before I started contributing to git in its > early weeks, I staged my own changes to my day-job project in > darcs to trickle them in to the company's central repository (I > was sufficiently faster than other members of the project and I > had to pace myself). > > It would have been much more difficult for me to grasp the basic > concepts of how "distributed development" process works, if I > did not have an exposure to Darcs before I started, especially > because I never used BK. This is an interesting thread. My own background with Git is that it's the first SCM I've ever used. And it comes from XMMS2 being the first open-source project I ever contributed back to. I joined shortly after the kernel (and XMMS2 team, likewise) had switched from BitKeeper to Git. So, as Linus said in his tech talk, "My brain didn't rot from years of thinking CVS was doing something sane," and now I can't imagine ever using a centralized SCM. The interesting thing is that now I'm learning about all the other distributed SCMs (most of which came before Git) now, after having learned Git, so my experience is backwards from a lot of you. When I first started, had I known about something like darcs, I probably would have loved it much more than git, which was only usable to the highest-level minds at first. I had to use cogito for almost everything. But now it's as easy to use as its distributed friends and so I don't think ease of use is much of an issue for anyone anymore. What I have noticed is a lot of nitpicking, of which I'm guilty, too. The issue Linus brought up about Darcs and versioning is not one I typically see surface in real life. Users usually complain about some _release_ version or, "I updated last week." The maintainer's reply is almost always, "Between (release x.x.x|last week) and now we fixed that problem, check out the latest source." While it could certainly get annoying when trying to track down a very specific version, it's not a make-or-break issue that's going to cause anyone to drop Darcs and flock to Git. I also saw another developer become upset about using Git over Mercurial partly because of the lack of documentation on things like the pack formats. And my own nitpick is that I would never use Mercurial because it's slow and in Python (a language I despise). The truth is there's a huge feature overlap between Git an Mecurial (as well as Darcs and others) and the fundamental stuff remains constant. In fact, I managed to clone, update, and diff some changes with mercurial without ever reading any documentation. Just thought I'd throw my observations in the ring instead of lurking on the list. We'll see if any of it is relevant. :) -Daniel "Puzzles" Chokola ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs [not found] ` <61e816970706241638j60830741p2cd1a102a72ae226@mail.gmail.com> 2007-06-24 23:40 ` Darcs Dan Chokola @ 2007-06-25 0:00 ` Linus Torvalds 2007-06-25 4:44 ` Darcs Dan Chokola 1 sibling, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Linus Torvalds @ 2007-06-25 0:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dan Chokola; +Cc: Junio C Hamano, Martin Langhoff, Bu Bacoo, git On Sun, 24 Jun 2007, Dan Chokola wrote: > > What I have noticed is a lot of nitpicking, of which I'm guilty, too. The > issue Linus brought up about Darcs and versioning is not one I typically see > surface in real life. Users usually complain about some _release_ version > or, "I updated last week." Actually, in the kernel, we are getting quite a lot out of "git bisect", and people throw git SHA1's around to describe where they are, or a particular commit. Which never happened with BK. So I think that the _ability_ to name revisions easily across different uses is quite important, because it then drives behaviour. Without it, you'll never notice you need it. With it, you start wondering how others handle it. For example, we have people like Andrew, who don't really "use" git, and he starts pointing to commits with their git ID, because he sees them flying past, and he knows they are stable and useful for things like gitweb. Linus ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-25 0:00 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds @ 2007-06-25 4:44 ` Dan Chokola 2007-06-27 0:00 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Dan Chokola @ 2007-06-25 4:44 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linus Torvalds; +Cc: Junio C Hamano, Martin Langhoff, Bu Bacoo, git On 6/24/07, Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org> wrote: > On Sun, 24 Jun 2007, Dan Chokola wrote: > > > > What I have noticed is a lot of nitpicking, of which I'm guilty, too. The > > issue Linus brought up about Darcs and versioning is not one I typically see > > surface in real life. Users usually complain about some _release_ version > > or, "I updated last week." > > Actually, in the kernel, we are getting quite a lot out of "git bisect", > and people throw git SHA1's around to describe where they are, or a > particular commit. > > Which never happened with BK. > > So I think that the _ability_ to name revisions easily across different > uses is quite important, because it then drives behaviour. > I wholeheartedly agree it's important as far as the big picture of SCM is concerned. Though I will say that the kernel development is an extreme case, where there's a huge number of developers and incredibly fast development where matching features are needed from the SCM. And I love how Git is born out of this extreme case, as it leads to a lot of great features that often scale down, too. But some of them matter less to, say, a small, well-integrated team of 5 or 10 people. And an idealistic model like the one offered by Darcs might even work better there since corner cases don't show up often. I'm spoiled by Git and the fact that it has these great abilities and features that set it apart, and I'd love everyone to use it. But I'd like people to know that many attributes of Git and other DSCMs don't differ all that much. (Please don't call me ugly and stupid. ;) And actually, this is something of a selling point, because it makes it Git seem cozy and familiar. So, relating back to the original post, and extending on Linus' 'academic' analogy, Darcs is like a thesis project from university that proves how DSCM can be done scientifically. Git is grown-up Darcs that proves how DSCM can be done practically. The bottom line is the foundations of DSCM, cheap branching, easy merging, and the like, can be done very similarly in either Darcs or Git, so moving from one to the other leaves you with a largely familiar set of commands. > Without it, you'll never notice you need it. With it, you start wondering > how others handle it. > Git really does have a way of spoiling its users (I don't know how CVS/SVN users live), no argument here. -Daniel "Puzzles" Chokola ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-25 4:44 ` Darcs Dan Chokola @ 2007-06-27 0:00 ` Martin Langhoff 0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Martin Langhoff @ 2007-06-27 0:00 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Dan Chokola; +Cc: Linus Torvalds, Junio C Hamano, Bu Bacoo, git On 6/25/07, Dan Chokola <dan@chokola.com> wrote: > So, relating back to the original post, and extending on Linus' > 'academic' analogy, Darcs is like a thesis project from university > that proves how DSCM can be done scientifically. Git is grown-up Darcs > that proves how DSCM can be done practically. I don't think it's like that. More like - BK showed it's done - Darcs picked some good bits from BK (while no other foss dscm did until git/hg/bzr came along) but got distracted with interesting but not-that-useful stuff - see patch algebra. cheers, m ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 20:45 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff ` (2 preceding siblings ...) 2007-06-24 22:22 ` Darcs Junio C Hamano @ 2007-06-24 23:21 ` Linus Torvalds 3 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Linus Torvalds @ 2007-06-24 23:21 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Martin Langhoff; +Cc: Bu Bacoo, git On Mon, 25 Jun 2007, Martin Langhoff wrote: > > The darcs commandset (init, push, pull) is what git, hg and bzr have > today in common. I really think the credit goes to BK, not darcs. BK is why a lot of git commands look like they do: I didn't want to re-implement BK, but I definitely wanted to reimplement the flow. At least for common stuff. The fact that darcs may have been more usable than other open source scm's says more about the other open source scm's than it says about darcs. arch/tla in particular was (is?) horribly messy. I tried to look at it before starting git, but even just a cursory look convinced me to look away.. Linus ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 17:59 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds 2007-06-24 20:45 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff @ 2007-06-28 1:26 ` Josh Triplett 2007-06-28 13:02 ` Darcs Johannes Schindelin 2007-06-29 7:13 ` Darcs Bu Bacoo 1 sibling, 2 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Josh Triplett @ 2007-06-28 1:26 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linus Torvalds; +Cc: Bu Bacoo, git [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 496 bytes --] Linus Torvalds wrote: > On Sun, 24 Jun 2007, Bu Bacoo wrote: >> What do you think about darcs? >> >> There was a lot written/spoken about morons and stupidos around >> thinking in cvs / svn, etc... (what would be the words for dudes >> around vss ....). > > Ahh, a chance to flame! I will never back down from such a challenge! > > Darcs is .. umm .. ehh.. Wow. You completely skipped the opportunity to flame Visual Source Safe (vss) users. :) Too easy? - Josh Triplett [-- Attachment #2: OpenPGP digital signature --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 252 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-28 1:26 ` Darcs Josh Triplett @ 2007-06-28 13:02 ` Johannes Schindelin 2007-06-29 7:13 ` Darcs Bu Bacoo 1 sibling, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Johannes Schindelin @ 2007-06-28 13:02 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Josh Triplett; +Cc: Linus Torvalds, Bu Bacoo, git Hi, On Wed, 27 Jun 2007, Josh Triplett wrote: > Wow. You completely skipped the opportunity to flame Visual Source Safe > (vss) users. :) Too easy? It's no fun if the targets of your ridicule don't even get it. Ciao, Dscho ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-28 1:26 ` Darcs Josh Triplett 2007-06-28 13:02 ` Darcs Johannes Schindelin @ 2007-06-29 7:13 ` Bu Bacoo 1 sibling, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Bu Bacoo @ 2007-06-29 7:13 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Josh Triplett; +Cc: git On 6/28/07, Josh Triplett <josh@freedesktop.org> wrote: > Linus Torvalds wrote: > > On Sun, 24 Jun 2007, Bu Bacoo wrote: > >> What do you think about darcs? > >> > >> There was a lot written/spoken about morons and stupidos around > >> thinking in cvs / svn, etc... (what would be the words for dudes > >> around vss ....). > > > > Ahh, a chance to flame! I will never back down from such a challenge! > > > > Darcs is .. umm .. ehh.. > > Wow. You completely skipped the opportunity to flame Visual Source Safe (vss) > users. :) Too easy? > > - Josh Triplett > > > > We've been talking about version control systems, not version killers.... ;) ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-24 5:32 Darcs Bu Bacoo 2007-06-24 17:59 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds @ 2007-06-25 11:36 ` Florian Weimer 2007-06-25 16:54 ` Darcs Bu Bacoo 1 sibling, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Florian Weimer @ 2007-06-25 11:36 UTC (permalink / raw) To: git * Bu Bacoo: > What do you think about darcs? The UI is nice, but darcs is quite slow (even if you don't hit the exponentional corner case in the merge algorithm). My main gripe with darcs, and the prime reason why I'm moving away from it, is its lack of support for software archaeology. If you haven't tagged a tree at some point, you'll face lots of trouble when you try to restore something that resembles the tree you had back then. This is a direct consequence of the "heap of patches" approach, but it's a real nuisance, and the benefits of the increased flexibility don't make up for it, IMHO. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: Darcs 2007-06-25 11:36 ` Darcs Florian Weimer @ 2007-06-25 16:54 ` Bu Bacoo 0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Bu Bacoo @ 2007-06-25 16:54 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Florian Weimer; +Cc: git Florian, what are you moving to? To GIT? On 6/25/07, Florian Weimer <fw@deneb.enyo.de> wrote: > * Bu Bacoo: > > > What do you think about darcs? > > The UI is nice, but darcs is quite slow (even if you don't hit the > exponentional corner case in the merge algorithm). > > My main gripe with darcs, and the prime reason why I'm moving away > from it, is its lack of support for software archaeology. If you > haven't tagged a tree at some point, you'll face lots of trouble when > you try to restore something that resembles the tree you had back > then. This is a direct consequence of the "heap of patches" approach, > but it's a real nuisance, and the benefits of the increased > flexibility don't make up for it, IMHO. > - > To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in > the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org > More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2007-06-29 7:13 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 16+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
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2007-06-24 5:32 Darcs Bu Bacoo
2007-06-24 17:59 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds
2007-06-24 20:45 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff
2007-06-24 21:19 ` Darcs Jan Hudec
2007-06-24 21:52 ` Darcs Theodore Tso
2007-06-24 22:22 ` Darcs Junio C Hamano
[not found] ` <61e816970706241638j60830741p2cd1a102a72ae226@mail.gmail.com>
2007-06-24 23:40 ` Darcs Dan Chokola
2007-06-25 0:00 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds
2007-06-25 4:44 ` Darcs Dan Chokola
2007-06-27 0:00 ` Darcs Martin Langhoff
2007-06-24 23:21 ` Darcs Linus Torvalds
2007-06-28 1:26 ` Darcs Josh Triplett
2007-06-28 13:02 ` Darcs Johannes Schindelin
2007-06-29 7:13 ` Darcs Bu Bacoo
2007-06-25 11:36 ` Darcs Florian Weimer
2007-06-25 16:54 ` Darcs Bu Bacoo
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